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Figures and tables showing how the properties of water changes along the boiling/condensation curve (vapor pressure, density, viscosity, thermal conductivity, specific heat, Prandtl number, thermal diffusivity, entropy and enthalpy).
- Entropy
Example - Entropy Evaporation Water to Steam. A process...
- Water-Steam Mollier Diagram
Download and print Mollier Diagram for Water - Steam . The...
- Water Vapor
Weight of water vapor in air; Specific Heat - Online Unit...
- Saturated Steam
Example - Boiling Water at 212 o F and 0 psig. At...
- Ice
Water - Thermophysical Properties Thermal properties of...
- Work
Heat (Energy) The SI-unit of heat - or energy - is joule (J)...
- Entropy
The "dryness fraction", x, gives the fraction by mass of gaseous water in the wet region, the remainder being droplets of liquid. An enthalpy–entropy chart, also known as the H–S chart or Mollier diagram, plots the total heat against entropy, [ 1 ] describing the enthalpy of a thermodynamic system. [ 2 ]
This simulation shows a temperature-entropy \((\textit{T-S})\) diagram for water. Use the checkboxes to add or remove a property from the diagram. You can show lines of constant enthalpy (green), pressure (blue), and and quality (mass% vapor, purple).
The Enthalpy-Entropy Diagram for Water provides a visual representation of the relationship between enthalpy and entropy in water.
The temperature enthalpy diagram for water, also known as the Mollier diagram or the h-s diagram, is a graphical representation of the thermodynamic properties of water. It plots enthalpy (h) against entropy (s) for various temperatures and pressures.
This simulation shows an enthalpy-entropy (H-S) diagram for water. Use the checkboxes to display lines of constant pressure P (purple), temperature T (green) or vapor quality q (blue). Check “phase envelope” to show saturated liquid (magenta), saturated vapor (orange line) and the critical point (black dot).
3 lis 2022 · Table A1: Saturated Water; Table A2: Superheated Vapor, Water; Table A3: Compressed Liquid Water; Reference States, default for fluid